Termites as mediators of the water economy of arid savanna ecosystems

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Abstract

Large termite mounds, constructed by colonies of various species of macrotermitine termites (Isoptera, Termitidae, Macrotermitinae), are dominant features of the arid and semi-arid savannas of southern Africa. These mounds can populate a savanna in very high densities, generally one to four colonies per hectare, containing biomass of termites and symbiotic fungi that exceeds the typical biomass of vertebrate and non-termite arthropod herbivores in these systems. Termites' construction of nest and mound turns over savanna soils at substantial rates, and, like other central-place foragers, they convey significant quantities of inorganic and organic matter into their nests, concentrating it there. In short, macrotermitine termites are ecosystem engineers, structuring and controlling to a large extent the flows of energy and matter through tropical savannas (Dangerfield et al. 1998).

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Turner, J. S. (2006). Termites as mediators of the water economy of arid savanna ecosystems. In Dryland Ecohydrology (pp. 303–313). Springer Netherlands. https://doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-4260-4_17

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